Researcher creates new, visually appealing model of multiple sclerosis
WASHINGTON — Multiple sclerosis may be more of a continuum than three distinct types of disease, and a new model attempts to capture that nuance, researchers reported here.
The “topographical” model could provide a new way of looking at disease course, Stephen Krieger, MD, of Mount Sinai in New York City, told MedPage Today.
“There’s thought that MS is more of a continuum,” Krieger said during an interview. “We should not think in terms of those categories, but we should think of it as a mixture of relapses and progression and how specifically they mix together.”
Currently, MS is classified as being in one of three groups: relapsing-remitting, secondary progressive, and primary progressive. But Krieger — a protege of Fred Lublin, MD, of Mount Sinai, who created the 3-category model of MS — said that system doesn’t accurately capture the range of disease.
“There’s real diagnostic uncertainty,” Krieger told MedPage Today. “It takes us years to figure out which category someone is in. A lot of progressive patients stay like they are for years. You’re not always sure which category someone fits into, nor do those categories tell us how someone’s disease is going to progress.”
For his new model — which Krieger calls a “true admixture of inflammation and progression” that describes the clinical course of MS in a more biologically informed way — he incorporated five factors: topographical distribution of lesions and the relapses they cause, relapse frequency, relapse severity, relapse recovery, and progression rate.
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